Collins v. Chappell

1958 OK 302, 333 P.2d 578, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 170, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 495
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1958
Docket38055
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1958 OK 302 (Collins v. Chappell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Chappell, 1958 OK 302, 333 P.2d 578, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 170, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 495 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves the right of defendant in error, Chappell, the admitted owner of the surface and reversionary mineral rights in and under a 40-acre tract of land, to recover certain impounded proceeds from the sale of oil from producing wells thereon, and to have his title to the entire fee simple estate in said land quieted against plaintiff in error. For an understanding of the situation out of which the controversy arose, certain historical facts concerning it should be related. |

In March of 1908, one Harry Wright, as trustee for certain other parties, executed and delivered an oil and gas lease on this tract (and another 40 acres) to Cabin Valley Mining Company, hereinafter referred to merely as "Cabin Valley." Said lease was for a term of 15 years, and as long thereafter "as oil and gas can be produced in paying quantities * * *"; and provided for royalty payments, from the lessee to the lessor, of 23% "of the gross run of oil or gas produced thereon." Production was obtained under said lease and has been 'continuous to and during the trial of this cause.

In November, 1908, the aforementioned title holder and lessor, Wright, executed and delivered a warranty deed conveying the tract to one Hall, subject to the above described lease and reserving all of said *580 grantor's "right, title and interest" therein. . A little more than a month later, Wright transferred his royalty under the lease to Cabin Valley, the lessee.

Thereafter, Hall, deeded his interest in the land to one Moore, who mortgaged it. When said mortgage was foreclosed several years later, one Bassman bought it in at foreclosure sale and received a sheriff's deed, dated June 8, 1926, to the property that had been covered by the mortgage.

Thereafter, on the 26th day of the same month, Cabin Valley assigned its lease, together with its "leasehold estate", to A. E., and Inez Paulger and G. A. Tibbs. By mesne assignments, thereafter executed and delivered, the last of which was dated June 30, 1926, Carter Oil Company became the owner of the working interest in the aforesaid oil and gas lease originally owned by Cabin Valley. On the day before, or June 29, 1926, Chestnut & Smith and others, who were then the owners, by mesne conveyances through the Paulgers and Tibbs, of the royalty under said lease, executed and delivered to the same oil company, hereinafter referred to merely as "Carter", an instrument entitled "Oil and Gas Lease", purporting to cover the same land. Thereafter, in 1931, plaintiff in error's later deceased husband, Ray M. Collins, purchased the lessor's one-eighth royalty in the leased premises. In 1936, Carter Oil Company assigned its working interest to Whitehill Oil Corporation; Whitehill, in 1946, assigned an undivided one-fourth of its interest to one Warwick; and Collins continued to receive his royalty payments until after the defendant in error obtained from Bassman (the hereinbefore mentioned foreclosure sale purchaser), and his wife, a warranty deed, dated January 8, 1937, describing the land. Said deed's habendum clause recited that the grantee was to have and to hold the "described premises" free and clear of "all former grants ® * * except oil and gas lease thereon of record and rights reserved therein * * *".

A month later, defendant in error addressed a letter to Stanolind Crude Oil Purchasing Company, hereinafter referred to merely as "Stanolind", which said company was purchasing all of the oil produced by the wells on the leased premises. In said letter, defendant in error asserted that Carter was producing the oil under a lease obtained from parties who had no right to give it, and requested that Stano-lind withhold and impound the proceeds from "both the working interest and the royalty interest" until he could submit to it an abstract showing the proper disposition to be made of said funds. Thereafter, Stanolind complied with said request; but, after Whitehill Oil Corporation and Warwick, for a consideration of $500.00, obtained an oil and gas lease executed and delivered to them by defendant in error on September 1, 1950, the latter gave his assent to Stanolind's paying out and ceasing to impound, the lessee's, or working interest owner's, share of the lease's oil run proceeds. On September 5, 1950, White-hill Oil Corporation and Warwick assigned to one Thos. A. Jarick the lessee's interest under both the Cabin Valley lease and the instrument termed a lease that Carter had obtained on June 29, 1926, as aforesaid.

Thereafter, in January, 1952, defendant in error commenced this action as plaintiff against the defendants Stanolind and June H. Collins, who, upon Ray M. Collins' death in 1940, succeeded to his royalty interest, if any. Stanolind filed an answer in the nature of interpleader, admitting it held impounded funds for whoever the court determined was the rightful owner of the "one-eighth royalty oil." At the trial, it was announced, that Indiana Oil Purchasing Company had become Stanolind's successor corporation. Defendant in error and plaintiff in error, June H. Collins, will hereinafter be designated "plaintiff" and "defendant'", as they appeared in the trial court.

The obvious purpose of the action, as the issues were joined by pleadings and stipulations of fact, was to determine who, as between plaintiff and defendant, was the owner of the royalty in and from the leased premises, and, who, as such, was entitled *581 to said owner's share of the impounded oil run proceeds.

At the close of the trial before the court, judgment was entered for plaintiff, decreeing him to be the owner of the entire fee in the 40 acres, and of the sum of $7570.60 then held by Indiana Purchasing Company as accrued proceeds from the sale of one-eighth of the oil produced from said land since the impounding of such funds commenced. After the overruling of her motion for new trial, defendant perfected the present appeal, thus activating the judgment's direction that Indiana Oil Purchasing Company continue to hold the impounded funds pending any appeal from. said judgment.

The argument, defendant relies upon for reversal, is to the general effect that the trial court erred both in his view of the evidence and of the law applicable thereto. Both parties agree, in substance, that the right to receive the rents and royalties under the early-day Cabin Valley lease, which we will refer to as the "royalty interest", was, in the beginning effectively severed, as a distinct estate, separate from the remainder of the fee of the 40 acres, when Harry Wright reserved it by the terms of his November, 1908, conveyance to Hall, and oil, in paying quantities, was produced and sold within the term of said lease. Also, they recognize, consistent with their fact stipulation at the trial, that this severance or separation of estates, or interests, under said lease continued to exist on June 29, 1926, when Robert M. Galer, Carter's assignor, owned the original Cabin Valley lease and defendant's predecessors in title, Chestnut & Smith, and others, owned the royalty interest and oil royalty accruing thereunder.

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 302, 333 P.2d 578, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 170, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-chappell-okla-1958.